NJ governor orders removal of Mississippi state flag from state park over Confederate battle flag design

The Mississippi state flag will no longer fly in New Jersey’s Liberty State Park because it includes the Confederate battle flag in it’s design, New Jersey’s governor announced Friday.

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The Mississippi state flag will no longer fly in New Jersey’s Liberty State Park because it includes the Confederate battle flag in its design, New Jersey’s governor announced Friday.

The flag will be replaced by an American flag.

Flags from every state are flown along Freedom Way, which runs through Liberty Park facing New York Harbor at the mouth of the Hudson River. The park has a view of Manhattan, Ellis Island and Liberty Island, home to the Statue of Liberty.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy ordered Mississippi’s flag removed after New Jersey state Sen. Sandra Cunningham raised the issue, according to a statement from the governor’s office. “The Confederate flag symbolizes an era of hate, violence, and division,” said Cunningham.

Murphy said the Confederate flag does not represent his state’s commitment to diversity.

“New Jersey’s strength is rooted in our diverse communities,” he said in a statement. “The Confederate symbol displayed on the Mississippi state flag is reprehensible and does not reflect our values of inclusivity and equality.”

“I’m disappointed in Gov. Murphy’s actions,” Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant said in a statement. “As I have repeatedly said, the voters of Mississippi should decide what the state flag is or is not,” the statement added.

Mississippi’s flag is the only state flag to feature the Confederate symbol, also known as the Southern Cross. It has been included in the flag’s top left corner since it was adopted by the state legislature in 1894.

To some, the Confederate battle flag is considered an important part of history, while others see it a controversial and racist symbol of American slavery.

Designed by local Mississippi artist Laurin Stennis, the new flag design features 19 blue stars around one central star with a red stripe on either side. The number of stars signify that Mississippi was the 20th state to join the Union in 1817.

The last time the state considered changing the flag was in 2001 when 65% of voters chose then to keep the flag with the Confederate symbol.

New Jersey’s Liberty Park will join several cities and public universities, including the University of Mississippi and Mississippi State University, who have already ceased to fly the controversial state flag.